File:Tairona - Bell with Feline Diety - Walters 572288 - Three Quarter.jpg

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Bell with Feline Diety   (Wikidata search (Cirrus search) Wikidata query (SPARQL)  Create new Wikidata item based on this file)
Artist
Anonymous (Tayrona)Unknown author
Title
Bell with Feline Diety
Description
English: The earliest evidence of goldworking in the Western Hemisphere dates to around 2000 BC, when gold was first hammered into thin foil sheets in ancient Peru. But it was the goldsmiths of Colombia who had access to the largest veins of gold ore, which they extracted by "placer mining" (panning) and by building simple, vertical shaft mines. Gold was melted and worked in a variety of techniques, including hammering, often around a wooden form, and lost-wax casting (in which a wax model of an object is made and encased in clay, which is fired, causing the wax to melt and run out through a hole; molten gold is then poured into the hole and hardens, and the resulting figure is revealed when the clay mold is broken apart). Much ancient American gold is naturally alloyed, or mixed, with copper, with percentages of copper rising to as high as 70 percent. This material, called "tumbaga," often has a reddish color. Ancient Colombian metalworkers developed "depletion gilding" techniques, in which the copper was removed from the gold using organic acids.

Tairona gold is characterized by almost flamboyant decoration: spiraling strands of gold braidwork sprout from the heads of standing rulers, who are often adorned with the same pectorals and lip plugs actual chieftains wore.

The knowledge of goldworking spread from the central and northern Andes into Central America, and gradually a blend of techniques and imagery developed into what is known as the "International Style." Very little of this material survived the Spanish conquest.
Date between 900 and 1500 (Late Intermediate)
Medium gold
medium QS:P186,Q897
Dimensions 5.8 × 2.8 cm (2.2 × 1.1 in)
institution QS:P195,Q210081
Accession number
57.2288
Place of creation Colombia
Object history
  • James Varón, Santa Marta, Columbia [date and mode of acquisition unknown]
  • Agueda Hernandez, Nyack, NY [date and mode of acquisition unknown]
  • Elena Austen Stokes, New York, NY [date and mode of acquisition unknown]
  • 2003: given to Walters Art Museum
Exhibition history Art of the Ancient Americas. The Walters Art Museum, Baltimore. 2002-2010.
Credit line Gift of Elena Austen Stokes, 2003
Source Walters Art Museum: Home page  Info about artwork
Permission
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Attribution: Walters Art Museum
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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current23:50, 24 March 2012Thumbnail for version as of 23:50, 24 March 20121,518 × 1,799 (2.39 MB)File Upload Bot (Kaldari) (talk | contribs)== {{int:filedesc}} == {{Walters Art Museum artwork |artist = Tairona |title = ''Bell with Feline Diety'' |description = {{en|The earliest evidence of goldworking in the Western Hemisphere dates to around 2000 BC, when gold w...